August 1942
|
Manhattan Project established in US
|
The US sets up the Manhattan Project to develop the first nuclear
weapon. It eventually employs more than 130,000 people and costs
US$2 billion ($25 billion in 2012 dollars).
|
16 July 1945
|
US conducts first ever nuclear test
|
The US government tests its first nuclear weapon, code-named
“Trinity”, in New Mexico. Its yield equals 20,000 tonnes of TNT. The date of
the test marks the beginning of the nuclear age.
|
6 August 1945
|
US drops atomic bomb on Hiroshima
|
The US detonates a uranium bomb over the Japanese city of Hiroshima,
killing more than 140,000 people within months. Many more later die from
radiation-related illnesses.
|
9 August 1945
|
A second bomb is dropped on Nagasaki
|
The US explodes a plutonium bomb over Nagasaki. An estimated 74,000
people die by the end of 1945. Little can be done to ease the suffering of
the victims who survive the blast.
|
24 January 1946
|
UN calls for elimination of atomic weapons
|
In its first resolution, the UN General Assembly calls for the
complete elimination of nuclear weapons and sets up a commission to deal with
the problem of the atomic discovery.
|
29 August 1949
|
Soviet Union tests its first nuclear bomb
|
The Soviet Union explodes a nuclear weapon code-named “First
Lightning” in Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan. It becomes the second nation to
develop and successfully test a nuclear device.
|
13 February 1960
|
France tests its first nuclear weapon
|
France explodes its first atomic bomb in the Sahara desert. It has a
yield of 60–70 kilotons. It later moves its nuclear tests to the South
Pacific. These
continue up until 1996.
|
30 October 1961
|
Largest ever bomb test conducted
|
The Soviet Union explodes the most powerful bomb ever: a 58-megaton
atmospheric nuclear weapon, nicknamed the “Tsar Bomba”, over Novaya Zemlya
off northern Russia.
|
16–29 October 1962
|
Cuban Missile Crisis occurs
|
A tense stand-off begins when the US discovers Soviet missiles in
Cuba. The US blockades Cuba for 13 days. The crisis brings the US and Soviet
Union to the brink of nuclear war.
|
5 August 1963
|
Partial Test Ban Treaty opens for signature
|
A treaty banning nuclear testing in the atmosphere, outer space and
under water is signed in Moscow, following large demonstrations in Europe and
America against nuclear testing.
|
16 October 1964
|
China conducts its first nuclear test
|
China explodes its first atomic bomb at the Lop Nor testing site in
Sinkiang Province. In total, China conducts 23 atmospheric tests and 22
underground tests at the site.
|
14 February 1967
|
Latin America becomes nuclear-free
|
A treaty prohibiting nuclear weapons in Latin America, the Treaty of
Tlatelolco, is signed at Mexico City. Parties agree not to manufacture, test
or acquire nuclear weapons.
|
1 July 1968
|
Non-Proliferation Treaty is signed
|
Under the Non-Proliferation Treaty, non-nuclear-weapon states agree
never to acquire nuclear weapons, and the nuclear-weapon states make a legal
undertaking to disarm.
|
18 May 1974
|
India conducts first nuclear test
|
India conducts an underground nuclear test at Pokharan in the
Rajasthen desert, codenamed the “Smiling Buddha”. The government falsely
claims it is a peaceful nuclear test.
|
22 September 1979
|
Nuclear explosion in Indian Ocean
|
A nuclear test explosion occurs over the South Indian Ocean off the
Cape of Good Hope. It is thought to have been conducted by South Africa with
the assistance of Israel.
|
12 June 1982
|
A million people rally for disarmament
|
One million people gather in New York City’s Central Park in support
of the Second United Nations Special Session on Disarmament. It is the
largest anti-war demonstration in history.
|
10 July 1985
|
Rainbow Warrior ship destroyed
|
The Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior is destroyed in
New Zealand on its way to the Murorua Atoll to protest French nuclear tests. New
Zealand later enacts nuclear-free legislation.
|
6 August 1985
|
South Pacific becomes nuclear-free
|
The South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty is signed at Rarotonga in
the Cook Islands. The treaty prohibits the manufacturing, stationing or
testing of nuclear weapons within the area.
|
10 December 1985
|
Anti-nuclear doctors win Nobel
|
The International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War receives
the Nobel Peace Prize for its efforts to bridge the cold war divide by
focusing on the human costs of nuclear war.
|
30 September 1986
|
Israel’s nuclear programme
revealed
|
The Sunday Times publishes information supplied by
Israeli nuclear technician Mordechai Vanunu, which leads experts to conclude
that Israel may have up to 200 nuclear weapons.
|
11–12 October 1986
|
US and Soviet leaders discuss abolition
|
US President Ronald Reagan and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev meet
at Reykjavik, Iceland, where they seriously discuss the possibility of
achieving nuclear abolition.
|
8 December 1987
|
Intermediate-range missiles
banned
|
The Soviet Union and US sign the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces
Treaty to eliminate all land-based missiles held by the two states with
ranges between 300 and 3,400 miles.
|
10 July 1991
|
South Africa joins Non-Proliferation Treaty
|
South Africa accedes to the Non-Proliferation Treaty. The government
claims to have made six nuclear weapons and to have dismantled them all.
|
15 December 1995
|
Southeast Asia becomes nuclear-free
|
The nations of Southeast Asia create a nuclear-weapon-free zone
stretching from Burma in the west, the Philippines in the east, Laos and
Vietnam in the north, and Indonesia in the south.
|
11 April 1996
|
Africa becomes a nuclear-free zone
|
Officials from 43 African nations sign the Treaty of Pelindaba in
Egypt establishing an African nuclear-weapon-free zone and pledging not to
build, test, or stockpile nuclear weapons.
|
1 June 1996
|
Ukraine becomes a nuclear-free state
|
Ukraine becomes a nuclear-weapon-free state after transferring the
last inherited Soviet nuclear warhead to Russia for destruction. Its
president calls on other nations to follow its path.
|
8 July 1996
|
World Court says nuclear weapons illegal
|
The International Court of Justice hands down an advisory opinion in
which it found that the threat or use of nuclear weapons would generally be
contrary to international law.
|
24 September 1996
|
Total nuclear test ban is signed
|
The Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty opens for signatures at the
United Nations. China, France, the UK, Russia and the US all sign the treaty.
India says it will
not sign the treaty.
|
27 November 1996
|
Belarus removes its last nuclear missile
|
Belarus turns its last nuclear missile over to Russia for destruction.
It joins Ukraine and Kazakhstan as former Soviet republics that have given up
all their nuclear arms.
|
May 1998
|
India and Pakistan conduct nuclear tests
|
India conducts three underground nuclear tests, its first in 24 years.
One is a thermonuclear weapon. Later in May, Pakistan tests six nuclear
weapons in response to India’s tests.
|
9 October 2006
|
North Korea conducts nuclear test
|
The North Korean government announces that it has successfully
conducted a nuclear test, becoming the eight country in the world to do so. It
provokes international condemnation.
|
30 April 2007
|
ICAN is launched
internationally
|
The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons is founded in
Australia. It calls for the immediate start of negotiations on a treaty to
prohibit and eliminate nuclear weapons.
|
4-5 March 2013
|
Norway hosts first humanitarian conference
|
The Norwegian government hosts the first-ever intergovernmental
conference to examine the humanitarian impact of nuclear weapons, bringing
together diplomats from 128 states.
|
14 February 2014
|
Mexico conference calls for ban
|
The chair of the Second Conference on the Humanitarian Impact of
Nuclear Weapons, held in Mexico, concludes that the time has come for a
diplomatic process to ban nuclear weapons.
|
9 December 2014
|
Austria issues landmark pledge
|
As host of the Vienna Conference on the Humanitarian Impact of Nuclear
Weapons, Austria issues a landmark pledge to stigmatize, prohibit and
eliminate nuclear weapons.
|
27 March 2017
|
Nuclear ban treaty negotiations begin
|
At the United Nations, the overwhelming majority of the world’s
governments begin negotiations on a treaty to prohibit nuclear weapons,
leading towards their total elimination.
|
7 July 2017
|
UN adopts nuclear weapon ban treaty
|
Following weeks of intensive negotiations, two-thirds of the world’s
nations vote to adopt the landmark UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear
Weapons.
|
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